Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2091391 | Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Isothermal nucleic acid sequence-based amplification (NASBA) was applied to detect Legionella 16S rRNA. The assay was originally developed as a Legionella pneumophila conventional NASBA assay with electrochemiluminescence (ECL) detection and was subsequently adapted to a L. pneumophila real-time NASBA format and a Legionella spp. real-time NASBA using molecular beacons. L. pneumophila RNA prepared from a plasmid construct was used to assess the analytical sensitivity of the assay. The sensitivity of the NASBA assay was 10Â molecules of in vitro wild type L. pneumophila RNA and 0.1-1Â colony-forming units (CFU) of L. pneumophila. In spiked respiratory specimens, the sensitivity of the NASBA assays was 1-10Â 000Â CFU of L. pneumophila serotype 1 depending on the background. After dilution of the nucleic acid extract prior to amplification, 1-10Â CFU of L. pneumophila serotype 1 could be detected with both detection methods. Finally, 27Â respiratory specimens, well characterized by culture and PCR, collected during a L. pneumophila outbreak, were tested by conventional and real-time NASBAs. All 11Â PCR positive samples were positive by conventional NASBA, 9/11 and 10/11 were positive by L. pneumophila real-time NASBA and Legionella spp. real-time NASBA, respectively.
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Authors
K. Loens, T. Beck, H. Goossens, D. Ursi, M. Overdijk, P. Sillekens, M. Ieven,